Anonymous wrote:Bates. Lewiston is Maine's second largest city/town.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Wellesley, a suburban SLAC. I disagree with folks who are saying that students who love SLACs never want to leave campus because there's so much going on. I loved Wellesley itself, but definitely appreciated being just outside Boston with easy access to restaurants, movies, concerts, professional sports, museums, and internships -- not to mention other colleges nearby.
Anonymous wrote:University of Richmond - 3 or 4 miles to very cool Carytown section of city and another couple miles to the city center. Very convenient and common trip for students looking to escape leafy suburban campus. Free university shuttles run pretty much continuously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Wellesley, a suburban SLAC. I disagree with folks who are saying that students who love SLACs never want to leave campus because there's so much going on. I loved Wellesley itself, but definitely appreciated being just outside Boston with easy access to restaurants, movies, concerts, professional sports, museums, and internships -- not to mention other colleges nearby.
Wellesley is an all-women college in the middle of nowhere. Barnard in the middle of NY - surrounded by other coed colleges and unis. Scripps is in the middle of nowhere surrounded by residential homes - but it's an all-women college surrounded by at least 6 co-ed colleges. Wellesley would be rough; it's not for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:I went to Wellesley, a suburban SLAC. I disagree with folks who are saying that students who love SLACs never want to leave campus because there's so much going on. I loved Wellesley itself, but definitely appreciated being just outside Boston with easy access to restaurants, movies, concerts, professional sports, museums, and internships -- not to mention other colleges nearby.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with others that SLACs have lots going on and a nearby city doesn't end up being a draw for most kids who are not already hard core urbanites.
At the far end of the spectrum, DS and I visited Grinnell last year -- an hour from Des Moines -- and they bring in all kinds of speakers and entertainment. Someone described it as like being on a cruise ship. They know they're off the beaten path and they make a big effort to counteract that.
Also, a lot of small SLACs nowadays have zip cars on campus. Kids aren't stranded the way they used to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would look at UChicago. Their class sizes are smaller than at many LACs and there's an exciting city just 15 minutes outside of a beautiful suburban campus. Discussions are lively among the kids inside and outside the classroom. Interesting, very intellectually engaged peer group.
Chicago is a great school and has a beautiful campus (my nephew is an undergrad there and DS is a grad student), but it doesn't feel like a SLAC. Many undergrads live off campus, which isn't characteristic of SLACs. Furthermore, the presence of grad students and their role as TAs is also quite different from what you would find at a SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Head scratching at Davidson mentions. Not a lot going on in Davidson, NC. It’s about a half hour from Charlotte, which is great. But not a lot that is much closer.
Agree. I don’t think 30-60min away from a major city or even a decent town is suburban or urban. Almost every SLAC has a decent town within an hour. Even Bates, Williams, Bowdoin, Smith, Kenyon, etc...
Anonymous wrote:Head scratching at Davidson mentions. Not a lot going on in Davidson, NC. It’s about a half hour from Charlotte, which is great. But not a lot that is much closer.
Anonymous wrote:Carleton and St Olaf are only an hour away from the Twin Cities